The Surface of Mercury
![]() 34k JPEG |
A Terrestrial Planet Like Earth's Moon? |
| The surface of Mercury, at first glance, looks
very much like that of the Moon. There are, however, some important differences.
On Mercury, the most heavily cratered regions, called cratered terrain,
have fewer craters than the highlands of the Moon. This is because Mercury
has more extensive intercrater plains than bury some of the cratered terrain.
These plains may be made of ejecta material from large impact basins or
they may be volcanic in origin. Image courtesy of M.S. Robinson |
| Caloris Basin -- Impact Site | ![]() 53k JPEG |
| This is one of the largest impact basins in the solar system and the
largest feature yet observed on Mercury. The Caloris Basin is 1300 kilometers
(810 miles) in diameter. Only half of the basin was imaged by Mariner
10, the other half was hidden by darkness. After the impact, the basin
was flooded by lava. Ridges and fractures formed when the volcanic rock
contracted and stretched as it settled under its own weight. Image courtesy of M.S. Robinson |
![]() 86k JPEG |
A Shrinking Planet? |
| The surface of Mercury has landforms that indicate its crust may have
contracted. They are long, sinuous scarps or cliffs called lobate scarps.
The white arrows indicate their locations. These scarps appear to be the
surface expression of thrust faults, where the crust is broken along an
inclined plane and pushed upward. What caused Mercury's crust to shrink?
As the interior of the planet cooled it contracted. Gravity then forced
the crust to adjust to a smaller interior. Image courtesy of M.S. Robinson |
| Discovery Rupes | ![]() 73k JPEG |
| The largest known lobate scarp on Mercury is Discovery Rupes ("rupes"
is Latin for cliff). Discovery is about 550 kilometers (350 miles) long
and as high as 1.5 kilometers (1 mile). Notice that the walls and floors
of two impact craters have been deformed by the thrust fault that formed
the scarp. Image courtesy of T.R. Watters, M.S. Robinson, and A.C. Cook |
![]() 48k JPEG |
Digital Elevation Model |
| How do we know how high Discovery Rupes is? One way is to use two images
that provide a stereo (3-D) view of the feature. Using a computer, the
heights (elevations) of all the points covered by a stereo pair can be
calculated and a digital elevation model made. This Mariner 10 image shows
the area covered by the stereo pair and the digital elevation model is
color-coded to show the highest elevations in white and lowest elevations
in black. The white arrows in the image indicate the location of part
of Discovery Rupes. Image courtesy of T.R. Watters, M.S. Robinson, and AC Cook |
Mercury Facts || Earth-based
Views || Surface Of Mercury
Volcanism vs. Impacts || Digital
Mosaics
Mercury Home
©2002 National Air and Space Museum